Comparative Analysis of Urban Areas of the Republic of Tatarstan and Perm Krai

Comparative Analysis of Urban Areas of the Republic of Tatarstan and Perm Krai

IX International Scientific Conference Analysis of International Relations 2018. Methods and Models of Regional Development Katowice, Poland 12 January 2018 COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF URBAN AREAS OF THE REPUBLIC OF TATARSTAN AND PERM KRAI Svetlana Khusnutdinova1, Tatiana Balina2, Larisa Chekmeneva2, Roman Nikolaev2, Rustem Khusnutdinov3 1 Kazan Federal University Institute of Management, Economics and Finance Kremlevskay,18, 420008 Kazan, Russia E-mail: [email protected] 2 Perm State National Research University Department of Social and Economic Geography Bukireva Street, 15, 614990, Perm, Russia E-mail: [email protected] 3 Kazan State Power Engineering University Institute of Electric Power Engineering and Electronics Krasnoselskaya, 51, 420066, Kazan, Russia E-mail: [email protected] Abstract: The processes of urbanization are widely covered in modern scientific and periodical literature, have long been at the epicenter of attention of scientists dealing with the problems of territorial organization of society. The article is devoted to a comparative analysis of the urbanized territories of the two regions of Russia – the Republic of Tatarstan and the Perm Krai. The capital cities of the regions have a population of over a million people. The 20th century was the century of the formation of urbanization processes in that and in the other region. And the process of urbanization was accompanied by industrialization, which was going on at a high pace. The end of the 20th century – the beginning of the 21st century was characterized by the most important trends that influenced all regions of Russia and, first of all, urbanized ones: the transition from the command economy to a market economy; the transition from industry to post- industry. These trends also manifested themselves in the studied regions. In the work were analyzed such characteristic features of the urban areas as the proportion of the population living in settlements with a population of more than 2,000 inhabitants; the share of the population living in settlements with a population of more than 2000 people in which: 70% of the population is housed in apartment buildings; more than 70% of the population is provided with centralized sewerage; less than 10% of the population have a personal subsidiary farm; the proportion of professionally educated residents exceeds 45%. The authors identify the similarities and differences by the example of urban areas of two regions of Russia. Key words: city, urban areas, urbanization, urban population JEL codes: R10, R20, R52 1. Introduction The processes of urbanization are widely and extensively covered in modern scientific and periodical literature. The growth of the population of the largest cities, the emergence of agglomerations and megalopolises are at the epicenter of attention of scientists dealing with the problems of territorial organization of society. The complex, multifunctional, dynamic nature of urbanized areas requires an interdisciplinary approach to study and is the cause of not stopping attempts to provide a more accurate and detailed scientific explanation for the ongoing urbanization processes. 54 IX International Scientific Conference Analysis of International Relations 2018. Methods and Models of Regional Development Katowice, Poland 12 January 2018 In the broadest approach, urbanization is understood as the complex process of increasing population of cities (in recent decades, mainly large and large), the formation and expansion of new forms of urban settlement, incl. agglomerations and megalopolises, the spread of urban lifestyle and a number of other quantitative and qualitative processes, such as suburbanization, de-urbanization, with which pendulum migration is directly related. Scientific publications of recent years are devoted to various aspects of the life of urbanized territories. The issues of sustainable development of cities, the preservation and improvement of the urban environment, changes in spatial and functional saturation, the gentrification of large cities, the decline in the population of small and medium-sized cities affect the cities of the world in one way or another. All of these questions and case-study of urban areas of different country are closely studied by modern science (Fang and Yu, 2017; Saraiva et al., 2017; Serbanica and Constantin, 2017; Vaz et al., 2017; Lopez-Morales et al., 2016; Delgadillo, 2016; Rodriguez et al., 2016; Bertinelli and Black, 2004; Fang, 2016). Research of the beginning of the 21st century is dedicated to the various driving forces of urbanization process, including accumulation of human capital as a leading factor of urbanization and economic growth (Forstall et al., 2009). Urbanization is an extremely complex geographical, social and historical process. The regions of the world and the country differ significantly in the nature and speed of the processes of urbanization, as well as in approaches to determining the criterion of the minimum population of city and, in general, the indicator of urbanization. The difference in approaches to the definition of the term of "city", its boundaries and minimum of population requires scientific understanding and the development of methods for determining. Especially the problem is relevant for growing large cities and their agglomerations. For example, the study of the criteria for determining the world's largest agglomerations based on unofficial sources and by the United Nations are considered in article “Which are the largest? Why lists of major urban areas vary so greatly” by Forstall et al. (2009). 2. Methodology and Data Modern socio-economic geography increases and enriches its methodical apparatus, using and transforming traditional methods of economic geography, creating and borrowing new ones. Investigating the issues of improving the territorial organization of society, locating the population and justifying the social and economic strategy of subjects at different levels, geographers use various indicators that reflect the processes of economic development. Humanization of public geography aims at studying the level, quality and lifestyle of the population, its physical and social health, the well-being and comfort of the living environment through new methods and approaches. In this regard, the study of demographic processes (including urbanization) with the identification of their territorial features, cause-effect relationships and development problems is in the focus of attention of public geography, requires updating the methodological apparatus and rethinking traditional approaches (Nefedova, 2002, 2013). Traditional methods in geographical science remain descriptive and comparative. Geographical description today is transformed into more modern types: descriptive-comparative, descriptive-predictive, comparative- constructive, which allow for collecting, analyzing and interpreting information about social processes and phenomena not only in terms of data accumulation, but also their structuring in accordance with the requirements regional development. Thus, the modern algorithm is implemented according to the scheme: description – explanation – foresight – management. The article is devoted to a comparative analysis of the urbanized territories of two regions of Russia that are part of the Volga Federal District – the Republic of Tatarstan and the Perm Territory. These regions have number of features of socio-economic development that unite them. Possessing a favorable economic-geographical position, rich and diverse natural-resource and economic potential, the Republic of Tatarstan and the Perm Krai have a number of competitive advantages among the regions of the Ural-Volga region. First, both regions are located in the middle and lower reaches of the Kama, and Tatarstan is at the confluence of the Volga and Kama, which provides them with important transport and logistics functions, due to the crossing of the most important waterways of Europe with the Trans-Siberian Railway. Both metropolitan cities – Kazan and Perm – are located on the banks of the largest rivers, which largely shaped the history of cities and their spatial configuration. The Kama River contributed to the emergence on its shores in the Perm region in the 1950s the new city of Tchaikovsky with energy and water-intensive industries. and in Tatarstan the formation of the Nizhnekamsk territorial production complex – with the machine-building and chemical industries in Naberezhnye Chelny and Nizhnekamsk, the construction of the Nizhnekamsk hydroelectric power station. In addition to this general branch of industrial specialization for the Perm Krai, other industries, such as the mining of hard coal and potassium salts, and metallurgical production, which played an important role in the formation of the urban settlement system, are especially important. Along the western slopes of the Ural 55 IX International Scientific Conference Analysis of International Relations 2018. Methods and Models of Regional Development Katowice, Poland 12 January 2018 Mountains, a whole axis of cities has formed, whose city-forming industries are associated with the extraction and primary processing of natural resources. Thirdly, an important stage in the development of urbanization processes was the period of the Second World War. The largest enterprises in the western part of the country were evacuated beyond the Volga and gave a powerful impetus to the further development of the cities of Tatarstan and the Kama region. It should be noted that the evacuation

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